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The four lenses of population aging : planning for the future in Canada's provinces  Cover Image Book Book

The four lenses of population aging : planning for the future in Canada's provinces / Patrik Marier.

Marier, Patrik, (author.).

Summary:

"Population aging is one of the most pressing issues facing governments and society today. With implications for health care, the economy, and an assortment of other policy areas, confronting this complex reality is increasingly urgent and never more so in the age of COVID-19. In The Four Lenses of Population Aging, Patrik Marier looks at how Canada's ten provinces are preparing for an aging society. Focusing on a wide range of administrative and policy challenges, this analysis explores multiple actions from the development of strategic plans to the expansion of long-term care capacity. To enhance this analysis, Marier adopts four lenses: the intergenerational, the medical, the social gerontological, and the organizational. By comparing the unique insights and contributions of each lens, Marier draws attention to the vital lessons and possible solutions to the challenges of an aging society. Drawing on over a hundred interviews with senior civil servants and thousands of policy documents, The Four Lenses of Population Aging is a significant contribution to the public administration, provincial politics, and comparative public policy literatures, and a timely resource for policymakers and general readers seeking an informed perspective on a timely and important issue."-- Back cover.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9781442612631 (Paper)
  • Physical Description: xx, 359 pages ; 24 cm.
  • Publisher: Toronto : University of Toronto Press, [2021]

Content descriptions

Bibliography, etc. Note:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Formatted Contents Note:
Frontmatter -- Contents -- Tables and Figures -- Foreword -- Acknowledgments -- Acronyms -- Introduction -- Theoretical Underpinning -- 1 The Lenses of Population Aging -- 2 Population Aging as Policy Problems -- 3 The Politics of the Long View -- Public Policy and Population Aging -- 4 Pension Policies -- 5 Health and Residential Care -- 6 Home Care Services and Caregiving -- Public Administration and Population Aging -- 7 Central Agencies and Inter-ministerial Coordination -- 8 Offices for Seniors -- 9 Conclusion -- Notes -- Index.
Subject: Population aging > Canada > Provinces.
Older people > Government policy > Canada > Provinces.

Available copies

  • 0 of 1 copy available at Legislative Library.

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  • 0 current holds with 1 total copy.
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Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Holdable? Status Due Date
Legislative Building HQ 1064 .C3 Mar (Text) 36970100370727 General Collection Volume hold Checked out 2024-04-23

List of Tables and Figures
xi
Foreword xiii
Luc Juillet
Acknowledgments xvii
List of Acronyms
xix
Introduction 3(18)
Facing the Consequences of an Aging Population
5(3)
Purpose of This Book
8(4)
Methods
12(1)
Content
13(8)
Theoretical Underpinning
1 The Lenses of Population Aging
21(30)
The Intergenerational Lens
24(10)
The Medical Lens
34(7)
The Social Gerontology Lens
41(5)
The Organizational Lens
46(3)
Conclusion: Policy Lenses in Public Administration
49(2)
2 Population Aging as Policy Problems
51(24)
Introduction
51(1)
Linking Policy Problems with Population Aging Lenses
51(12)
Solutions to Policy Problems
63(6)
Interactions between the Lenses: Coexistence, Complementarity, and Competition
69(4)
Conclusion
73(2)
3 The Politics of the Long View
75(26)
Introduction
75(2)
The Rise and Fall of Planning
77(5)
Thinking and Acting with a Long View in the Public Sector
82(8)
What Facilitates or Impedes the Long View in Canadian Provinces?
90(5)
Conclusion
95(6)
Public Policy and Population Aging
4 Pension Policies
101(31)
Introduction
101(2)
Historical Overview and Current Structure of Canada's Pension Policy
103(4)
What Solution for Pensions?
107(2)
The Harper Years: Lack of Consensus Led to Multiple Provincial Initiatives
109(13)
The Liberal Years: Improving the CPP, Occupational Pension Plans, and Neiv Alternatives
122(3)
A Lens Analysis of the Pension Debates
125(4)
Conclusion
129(3)
5 Health and Residential Care
132(31)
Introduction
132(1)
Health Care Expenditure
133(10)
Long-Term Care: Residential Care
143(9)
Analysing the Four Lenses in Health Policy
152(5)
COVID-19 and the Long-Term Care Crisis of 2020
157(2)
Conclusion
159(4)
6 Home Care Services and Caregiving
163(36)
Introduction
163(2)
Home Care Services in Canadian Provinces
165(17)
Caregiving
182(5)
Home Care as a Universal Solution for Population Aging?
187(8)
Conclusion
195(4)
Public Administration and Population Aging
7 Central Agencies and Inter-ministerial Coordination
199(24)
Introduction
199(2)
The Organizational Lens and Policy Problems
201(1)
Central Agencies
202(14)
Inter-ministerial Coordination
216(4)
Conclusion
220(3)
8 Offices for Seniors
223(29)
Introduction
223(1)
The Creation (and Expansion) of Offices for Seniors
224(10)
What Do Offices for Seniors Do?
234(5)
The Tension between the Social Gerontological and Medical Lenses
239(5)
Long-Term View
244(3)
A Third Wave of Offices for Seniors? Seniors' Advocate Offices
247(2)
Conclusion: Divergent Path for Seniors' Offices?
249(3)
Conclusion
252(23)
Revisiting the Four Lenses of Population Aging
253(9)
Revisiting the Long-View Theoretical Expectations
262(6)
Federalism, Population Aging, and Policy Diffusion and Learning
268(3)
Continuing Marginalization of Social Policies and Its Consequences in the Context of an Aging Population and the Challenges of COVID-19
271(4)
Notes 275(72)
Index 347


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